Correctional Nursing – Staying True to Yourself in a Strange Land

You can feel like you have been dropped into a foreign country where people are in strange outfits and speaking a strange language. Here’s the challenge of correctional nursing – stripped of the many supports that are standard in traditional settings such as a nursing administration or a team of like-minded staff members, many correctional nurses must carve their own path to professional practice behind bars. This is when it is most important to understand the boundaries of your license and the Nurse Practice Act for your state or jurisdiction (Here is a handy directory of State NPAs). This is also when an understanding of the professional Code of Ethics for Nurses is important. The principles that guide professional practice such as patient autonomy, human dignity, and patient-centered care, are challenged every day in a correctional setting.

For many nurses, this is the first time they have been confronted with defining their own practice boundaries or needing to speak out when a request is made that is beyond their scope of practice or is unethical. Here are some recommendations to help you remain true to your professional licensure and ethical responsibilities.

Know your role and responsibilities. Don’t wait for a situation to arise that seems wrong to you. Review your nurse practice act and how it practically applies to your correctional nursing position. For example, if you are a licensed practical/vocational nurse (LPN/LVN), are you able to assess and determine interventions for a patient condition? If not, do not accept a sick call assignment.

Know your job description, policies and procedures. As with your professional role and responsibilities, know your role and responsibilities to your employer. Determine, before a situation happens, if there are any elements of these documents that don’t seem appropriate to your licensure or ethical responsibilities.

Talk to your supervisor. If you have concerns about what you are being asked to do, follow the chain of command and address the issues with your supervisor. Ask about a mechanism for refusing assignments that are not consistent with the nurse practice act. Always work toward a positive resolution to the issue.

Prepare a good response to an officer request. Have a well-thought-out response for when you are asked by an officer or security administrator to perform a function that is outside your professional or ethical boundaries. Remember, these folks may not know they are asking you to do something unlawful or unethical. Give them the benefit of the doubt. Here is an example to get you started thinking about how you can respond respectfully and collegially” “I’d really like to help you out with this issue but what you are asking me to do is beyond what my nursing license allows (or is not considered ethical for a nurse to do). Let’s see if we can come up with a solution that works for all of us.”

All of the recommendations above address the issue of being asked to work outside the boundaries of professional nursing practice, but there is another concern that you need to be ever alert for – leaving your nursing license at the door when you walk in. Only you can maintain that mental attitude of who you are as a nurse and what your goals are for professional practice. The definition of correctional nursing found in the ANA’s Correctional Nursing Scope and Standards of Practice is a good place to start for creating your own mission statement for your work as a correctional nurse.

Correctional nursing is the protection, promotion, and optimization of health and abilities, prevention of illness and injury, alleviation of suffering through the diagnosis and treatment of human response, advocacy, and delivery of health care to individuals, families, communities, and populations under the jurisdiction of the criminal justice system.

Using this definition as a guide, you can be reminded of what you do, how you do it and where we are practicing.

What I Do

Protect and promote health

Prevent illness and injury

Alleviate suffering

How I Do It

Through the nursing process

By being a patient advocate

Where I Do It

In the criminal justice system

As different as nursing may seem inside the security perimeter, being a nurse does not change. But it is up to us to keep it that way.

Have you had to carve out your own path in your correctional nursing practice? Share your thoughts in the comments section of this post.

Guest post by Dr. Lorry Schoenly nurse author and educator specializing in the field of correctional health care. She has written 6 continuing education courses especially for the Correctional Healthcare Campus.